Post on 14-Feb-2017
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CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS)
CCAFS GENDER STRATEGY
February 2012
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Correct citation:
Ashby J, Kristjanson P, Thornton P, Campbell B, Vermeulen S, Wollenberg E. 2012. CCAFS Gender Strategy.
CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS). Copenhagen, Denmark.
Available online at: www.ccafs.cgiar.org.
Published by the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
CCAFS Coordinating Unit - Department of Agriculture and Ecology, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of
Copenhagen, Rolighedsvej 21, DK-1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark. Tel: +45 35331046; Email: ccafs@life.ku.dk
Creative Commons License
This Report is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution – NonCommercial–NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
This publication may be freely quoted and reproduced provided the source is acknowledged. No use of this
publication may be made for resale or other commercial purposes.
© 2011 CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS).
DISCLAIMER:
This report has been prepared as an output for the Integration for Decision Making Theme under the CCAFS
program and has not been peer reviewed.
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Contents
1.0 Introduction ........................................................................................................... 4
1.1 Justification ......................................................................................................... 4
2.0 Gender in relation to the goals and objectives of CCAFS ............................................... 7
2.1 Goals of CCAFS .................................................................................................... 7
2.2 CCAFS objectives ................................................................................................. 8
2.3 Research questions ............................................................................................. 11
3.0 Impact Pathways ................................................................................................... 12
3.1 Gender dimensions of impact pathways.................................................................... 12
3.2 Partnerships for achieving outputs, outcomes and impacts .......................................... 14
4.0 Activities ............................................................................................................ 15
4.1 Approach and methods....................................................................................... 15
4.1.1 Gender analysis ............................................................................................ 15
4.1.2 Gender research ............................................................................................. 16
4.2 Gender in the research cycle ................................................................................ 16
4.2.1 Targeting and priority setting stage of the research cycle.................................... 16
4.2.2 Research product discovery and development stages ......................................... 17
4.2.3 Monitoring, evaluation stage of the research cycle ............................................. 17
4.3 Theme-based research activities integrating gender ................................................ 17
4.3.1 Theme 1 ― Adaptation to progressive climate change ....................................... 17
4.3.2 Theme 2 — Adaptation through managing climate risk ......................................... 18
4.3.3 Theme 3 — Pro-poor climate mitigation ............................................................ 19
4.3.4 Theme 4 — Integration for decision-making ....................................................... 20
4.4 Capacity for conducting gender analysis and gender research .................................. 21
4.4.1 Management, staffing and resources for the gender strategy ............................... 21
4.4.2 Capacity building for integration of gender across the research program .................. 21
5.0 Monitoring, evaluation, and impact assessment ........................................................ 22
5.1 Monitoring and evaluation of progress towards gender-responsive outcomes ............... 22
5.2 Feedback and learning from gender analysis .......................................................... 22
5.3 Impact assessment .............................................................................................. 24
6.0 Budget for gender activities ................................................................................... 25
7.0 Synthesis ............................................................................................................. 27
8.0 References ........................................................................................................... 28
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1.0 Introduction
The CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) is a
10-year strategic partnership of the CGIAR Consortium and the Earth System Science
Partnership (ESSP), CCAFS also partners with all 15 CGIAR Centers and intersects with the
other CGIAR Research Programs (“CRPs”). CCAFS brings together researchers in agricultural
science, development research, climate science, and Earth System science, to address the need
for evidence-based research and communications to bring clarity to the complex trade-offs that
exist between food security, development, and climate action.
This Gender Strategy is intended to strengthen CCAFS’ development impact through the
integration of gender issues into research in keeping with commitments in the CGIAR Strategy
and Results Framework to ensure that rural women benefit from its contribution to poverty
reduction, enhanced environmental resilience, improved food security, human health and
nutrition. CCAFS plans to situate its gender strategy within a broader strategy addressing social
inclusion for different social groups while bearing in mind that women are central to agriculture
in developing countries. This Strategy was prepared following the CGIAR Guidelines for CRP
Gender Strategy1 that focus on showing how the CRP will address issues of gender in its
research (as distinct from gender in the workplace which will be handled separately).
Accordingly, the document is organized into seven sections that together provide an explanation
of how the CRP will address gender issues relevant to its research outputs, activities and
outcomes and against which the CRP will report in future, as part of the CGIAR annual
monitoring process.
1.1 Justification
The well-known gender equity gap in agriculture means that farm women and men in developing
countries have different vulnerabilities and unequal capacities to deal with the impact of climate
change on agriculture. The gender gap encompasses differences among men and women in
financial capital; in ownership and use rights over resources including land, water, livestock,
grazing and fisheries; in capacity to capture beneficial environmental services; in labor use and
the returns to labor; in political capital (empowerment); and in their access to technology,
training, information and agricultural advisory services in general. Gender inequalities are
significant because in most regions of the world one out of five farms is headed by a woman and
women comprise about 40 percent of the agricultural labor force in developing countries,
according to available census data (FAO, 2011). Insecure property rights, inequitable
opportunities for asset accumulation and for income generation place women and in particular
female-headed households, among the most vulnerable segments of the rural poor (Deere &
Doss, 2006; Quisumbing, Haddad & Pena, 2001; Deere & Leon, 2002).
1 CGIAR Consortium, April 2011. Guidelines for the development of a gender strategy in each CRP.
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For the most vulnerable, climate change has the potential to worsen poverty and potentially, to
reinforce gender inequalities in some of the most important capabilities for coping with
additional hardship (World Bank, FAO & IFAD, 2009; BRIDGE, 2008; Demetriades & Espeln,
2010; Denton, 2002; Meinzen-Dick et al., 1997; Moser, 2007; Jones & Thornton, 2008). Case
studies show, for example, that one of the important effects of environmental stress in farming
systems is the intensification of women’s workloads (BRIDGE, 2008; Awumbila & Momsen,
1995; Agwu & Okhimamwe, 2009). In addition to their role as producers, farm women are
usually responsible for cooking food, so their decisions about fuels can reduce carbon emissions,
but their lack of information about energy-efficient alternatives is a handicap (World Bank, FAO
& IFAD, 2009a).
Box 1 summarizes this overall picture in relation to important features of the gender gap in
agriculture that require consideration in the design and implementation of gender-responsive
climate adaptation and mitigation strategies. Based on cases drawn from Asia, Africa and Latin
America; the World Bank (2010) concludes that gender-sensitive climate change adaptation and
mitigation produces measurably better results in terms of risk management protection of natural
resources and reduction of greenhouse gases. Even though statistical data are still scarce on
which to base inferences about gender-differentiated climate impacts on agriculture, the gender
gap provides reasonable grounds for the expectation that poor rural women and men will
generally be affected differently by the effects of climate change and will respond to and benefit
differently from climate protection and adaptation instruments (Masika, 2002; Mitchell, Tanner,
and Lussier, 2007; World Bank, 2010). The implications of gender for adaptation and mitigation
are diverse and not all are negative. Even among the poor and vulnerable, farm women are not a
homogenous group and will make different trade-offs and capture different levels of benefits
depending on other cultural and socio-economic conditions (Doss, McPeak and Barrett, 2006;
Peterman et al., 2010; Mitchell, Tanner, and Lussier 2007; Smith et al., 2001). However, little is
known about how social and gender disparities actually affect the ways in which poor men and
women respond to climate-change impacts on agriculture and there is serious scarcity of gender-
disaggregated data analysis with which to address this issue (Lambrou and Piana, 2005).
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Box 1. The Gender Gap in Agriculture
The gender gap
Implications for climate change
adaptation and mitigation Land, water and
other agricultural
assets
For those developing countries for
which data are available, between 10
percent and 20 percent of all land
holders are women, although this masks
significant differences among countries
even within the same region. The
developing countries having both the
lowest and highest shares of female land
holders are in Africa.
Gender-responsive receptivity to
mitigation options and adaptive
strategies requires closing the gap in
access to land, water, forest, fishery and
other agricultural assets; reforming laws
to guarantee equal rights; empowering
women to ensure that they are aware of
their rights and able to claim them.
Labour Markets Farms run by female-headed households
have less labour available for farm work
because these households are typically
smaller and have fewer working-age
adult members and because women have
heavy and unpaid household duties that
take them away from more productive
activities.
Adaptive intensification of farming
systems freeing farmwomen’s time
through labour-saving technologies and
the provision of public services, raising
women’s human capital, attention to
employment and income implications
for women among the semi-landless or
landless labouring poor.
Financial Services Smallholders everywhere face
constraints in accessing credit and other
financial services, but in most countries
the share of female smallholders who
can access credit is 5–10 percentage
points lower than for male smallholders.
Access to credit and insurance are
important for accumulating and retaining
other assets.
Legal and institutional reforms to ensure
risk management and mitigation options
are responsive to the needs and
constraints of women. Innovative
delivery channels making insurance
mechanisms and financial services more
readily available to rural women.
Human and Social
Capital
The gender gap in education and access
to information and communications
technologies is particularly acute in rural
areas, where female household heads
sometimes have less than half the years
of education of their male counterparts.
Designing climate-related information
content and delivery methods
appropriate for women. Building
women’s social capital for collective
action through reducing transaction
costs, pooling risks, developing skills
and building confidence.
Technology Women are much less likely to use
purchased inputs such as fertilizers and
improved seeds or to make use of
mechanical tools and equipment. In
many countries women are only half as
likely as men to use fertilizers.
Improving women’s access to
agricultural technologies for adaptation
and mitigation, developing strategies for
climate-ready crop and livestock
improvement that consider women’s
land, labor and capital constraints.
Source: CCAFS & FAO. 2011. Gender and climate change issues in agriculture and food security research
and rural development.
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Although the implications of gender inequities for the design and implementation of climate-
change adaptation and mitigation strategies related to agriculture are not yet well-documented or
understood, ample risk of widening gender inequities can be anticipated if the gender gap is not
addressed. Risks include:
Lower rates of adaptive innovation and heightened food insecurity among women food
producers compared to men if climate-ready crop varieties, crop, livestock, forest,
fishery or water management practices are not compatible with women’s preferences and
constraints;
Lower incomes for women if they lose control over traditionally female sources of
income generation as markets and product niches shift in response to climate change;
Increased drudgery in provisioning household fuel and water as their scarcity intensifies
or if male outmigration from farms accelerates in response to hardship;
A widening gap between women and men in capacity to adapt if women’s indigenous
knowledge loses its viability and as food, medicinal plants and domestic animals
important to women are lost;
Increased vulnerability to risk for women if the gender gap persists in access to
extension and communication technologies and thus to timely climate-change related
information; Heightened, unequal exposure to the impacts of drought or flooding if risk management
mechanisms fail to cater to gender-differences; and Policies and policy frameworks for climate change adaptation and mitigation (e.g.
national climate adaptation plans) and mechanisms for emerging markets in
environmental services (e.g. mitigation funds) that overlook women’s constraints and
needs and adversely affect gender equity.
The risk of overlooking or inadvertently contributing to adverse outcomes of this type is why
consideration of gender differences needs to be factored into research intended to build capacity
of the poor to mitigate and adapt to climate change impacts on agriculture. According to FAO
(2011), a concerted effort to tackle gender differences in agriculture could increase agricultural
output in the developing world by 2.5–4 percent on average and lift an estimated 100 million
people out of poverty, if women farmers had the same access to resources as men. Climate
change is likely to make this transformation more difficult. There is therefore an important need
and opportunity for science-based innovation tackling climate-change impacts on agriculture to
contribute to closing the gender gap and to realizing the associated impacts on productivity
increases and poverty reduction.
2.0 Gender in relation to the goals and objectives of CCAFS
2.1 Goals of CCAFS
The goal of CCAFS is “To promote a food secure world through the provision of science-based
efforts that support sustainable agriculture and enhance livelihoods while adapting to climate
change and conserving natural resources and environmental services.” Two sub-goals are:
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To identify and test pro-poor adaptation and mitigation practices, technologies and
policies for food systems, adaptive capacity and rural livelihoods; and
To provide diagnosis and analysis that will ensure the inclusion of agriculture in climate
change policies, and the inclusion of climate-change issues in agricultural policies, from
the sub-national to the global-level in a way that brings benefits to the rural poor.
The goals of bringing benefits to the rural poor and of improving the supply of pro-poor
adaptation and mitigation practices, technologies and policies require gender-responsive research
and explicit gender impact. In the CCAFS research program, gender is approached primarily as a
cross-cutting theme nested in a broad concern with positive impact on social inclusion for the
rural poor. Gender analysis2 is applied to deepen the relevance of other research themes.
In addition, in view of the substantial knowledge gap with respect to the implications of gender
for climate change adaptation and mitigation in agriculture, each of the four Themes has defined
key questions that require gender research to understand the underlying causes of differences in
the ways poor men and women manage their assets and livelihoods in response to climate-
change. The Program will use this knowledge for formulating adaptation and mitigation
strategies, technologies and policies that diminish related gender and social disparities.
Linking knowledge with action is an important aspect of the overall Program strategy. Thus, the
gender strategy includes special efforts to actively engage women as well as men in climate-
change related processes from local to global levels. This principle encompasses activities
ranging from participatory action research in benchmark sites to global policy dialogue.
2.2 CCAFS objectives
CCAFS works around four Themes, three of which include adaptive research and development
activities in benchmark sites representing different climate-stress contexts. Themes 1, 2 and 3
involve the development of knowledge, strategies, methods and tools leading to the identification
and testing of technologies, practices, institutional arrangements and policies to support
progressive adaptation over the long-term, risk management over a shorter time frame and
mitigation for agriculture in the face of climate change. Theme 4 provides the diagnosis for
engagement with stakeholders in the policy context via strategies for linking knowledge with
action, regional scenario development and vulnerability characterization; building integrative ex
ante assessment tools and analyses; and strengthening capacity development. Place-based
research is located in three target regions with additional target regions to be identified. The three
initial focus regions are East Africa, West Africa and South Asia.
CCAFS Themes are designed to add value to technology development in other CRPs through
close collaboration in CCAFS target regions and benchmark sites: The Integrated Systems
CGIAR Research Programs (Dryland Systems, Humidtropics and AAS); CGIAR Research
Program on Policies, Institutions and Markets; the Sustainable Production CGIAR Research 2 Gender analysis refers to the study of different roles, responsibilities, assets and agency of men and women,
including their differential access to, control over and use of natural, financial, social, political and infrastructure-
related resources.
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Programs (WHEAT, MAIZE, GRiSP, RTB, Grain Legumes, Dryland Cereals and Livestock and
Fish); CGIAR Research Program for Nutrition and Health; CGIAR Research Program on Water,
Land and Ecosystems; and CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry;
by adding the climate change context. Thus gender-responsive objectives of CCAFS are linked
to objectives and activities to produce gender-differentiated outputs collaboratively with other
CRPs.
The Program’s objectives are subdivided by Theme (see Table 2.1). The application of gender
analysis and research are integrated into the Milestones for each objective. The gender content of
milestones is summarised in Table 2.1 and can be consulted in detail in the Program logframe.
Gender analysis is applied in: (a) ex ante assessment of the likely implications of social and
gender differences for the design of research products; (b) testing and evaluation for the
development of research products; and (c) impact assessment.
The objectives for gender analysis and research are to:
1. Contribute to the design of processes, technologies and related policy and institutional
frameworks for the adaptation of farming systems in the face of future climate
uncertainties that reduce gender disparities in critical vulnerabilities, reduce female
drudgery and improve incomes for resource-poor men and women (Theme 1);
2. Integrate consideration of gender differences in to the development and testing of
improved climate information products and services and risk management innovations so
that these produce benefits for resource-poor women producers and traders as well as men
(Theme 2);
3. Evaluate selected organizational, policy and financial arrangements and farm-level
agricultural mitigation practices to deliver benefits from mitigation activities to poor
women as well as to men (Theme 3); and
4. Improve the gender-relevance of frameworks for policy analysis, databases, methods and
ex ante impact assessment for planning responses to climate change in agriculture (Theme
4).
CCAFS plans to set gender specific participation targets with partners for investment in
improving female leadership, scientific capacity and engagement in CCAFS-related policy
dialogue, research of all types and testing of adaptation and mitigation strategies, practices and
technologies with local partners.
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Table 2.1. Gender in CCAFS Themes and Objectives
Theme 1. Adaptation to
Progressive Climate
Change
Theme 1. Gender
content
Theme 3. Pro-Poor
Climate Change
Mitigation
Theme 3. Gender
content
Objective 1.1 Analyze and
design processes to support
adaptation of farming
systems in the face of future
uncertainties of climate in
space and time
Contribute to the
design of
processes,
technologies and
related policy and
institutional
frameworks for the
adaptation of
farming systems in
the face of future
climate
uncertainties that
reduce gender
disparities in
critical
vulnerabilities,
reduce female
drudgery and
improve incomes
for resource-poor
men and women
Objective 3.1 Inform
decision makers about
the impacts of alternative
agricultural development
pathways
Evaluate selected
development
pathways,
organizational,
policy and financial
arrangements and
farm-level
agricultural
mitigation practices
to deliver benefits to
poor women as well
as to men
Objective 1.2
Develop breeding
strategies for addressing
abiotic and biotic stresses
induced by future climatic
conditions, variability and
extremes, including
novel climates
Objective 3.2 Identify
institutional arrangements
and incentives that enable
smallholder farmers and
common-pool resource
users to reduce GHGs
and improve livelihoods
Objective 1.3 Improved
adaptation policies from local
to international level
supporting farming
communities, rural
institutions and food system
actors adapted to future
climate conditions in at least
20 countries.
Objective 3.3 Test and
identify desirable on-farm
practices and their
landscape-level
implications
Theme 2. Adaptation
through Managing Climate
Risk
Theme 2. Gender
content
Theme 4. Integration for
Decision Making
Theme 4. Gender
content
Objective 2.1
Identify and test innovations
that enable rural communities
to better manage climate-
related risk and build
more resilient livelihoods
Integrate
consideration of
gender differences
into the
development and
testing of improved
climate-risk
information
products and
services and
management
innovations so that
these produce
benefits for
resource-poor
women producers
and traders as well
as men
Objective 4.1 Explore and
jointly apply
approaches and methods
that enhance knowledge to
action linkages with
a wide range of partners at
local, regional
and global levels
Improve the gender-
relevance of
stakeholder
dialogues,
frameworks for
policy analysis,
databases, methods
and ex ante impact
assessment for
planning responses
to climate change in
agriculture
Objective 2.2
Identify and test tools and
strategies to use advance
information to better manage
climate risk through food
delivery, trade and crisis
response
Objective 4.2
Assemble data and tools for
analysis and planning
Objective 2.3
Support risk management
through enhanced
prediction of climate impacts
on agriculture, and climate
information and services
Objective 4.3
Refine frameworks
for policy analysis
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2.3 Research questions
Research questions related to gender in CCAFS address critical knowledge gaps identified as
obstacles to progress in the Theme-based research. The principal questions with this purpose are:
1. What are the implications of gender relations for vulnerability to different levels of
exposure to climate stress and for adaptation to progressive climate change at the level of
individuals, households and communities?
2. What are the characteristics and causes of gender-differentials in access to and use of
climate-related information?
3. What are promising institutional arrangements enabling women as well as men to benefit
from incentives for delivering environmental services?
4. What gender-differentiated patterns can be identified in the trade-offs that poor men and
women make between adaptation and mitigation options for dealing with climate change
in agriculture?
5. How are risks arising from climate change or variability distributed among men and
women with different resource endowments and assets?
Recently, the issue of ‘climate smart’ agriculture has become increasingly discussed and while
still controversial, it is appealing in that it does not differentiate between agricultural practices,
strategies, policies and institutions asbeing related to adaptation versus mitigation (as indeed
farmers themselves don’t do, and many of them accomplish both, for example). Thus an
overarching question for CCAFS relating to gender, and one very relevant to many of the other
CRP’s is:
What are are the ‘climate smart’ agricultural and NRM practices, strategies,
policies and institutional arrangement opportunities we are seeing being adopted
(or not) across a wide range of CCAFS and CRP sites, and if and how are they
beneficial for men and for women?
As described below, a cross-CRP/CG Center discussion underway is the selection of ‘gender
sentinel sites’ where innovative, multi-scale gender research will be designed and implemented
to address such a cross-cutting and key question.
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3.0 Impact Pathways Success for CCAFS requires women as well as men to benefit from CCAFS’ expected impacts
of poverty reduction via more sustainable rural livelihoods, improved food security and fair
access to benefits from participation in emerging markets for environmental services, for
millions of resource-poor people dependent on rural livelihoods. The Program’s rationale (or
theory of change) for expecting its research outputs to contribute to these outcomes and impacts,
is that engagement with a cross-section of key stakeholders for the co-development and use of its
key knowledge and capacity building outputs will lead to positive changes in decision-making
about policy, technology and institutional innovations for dealing with climate change in
agriculture. Key changes in decision-making are targeted with respect to adaptation funding
(Theme 1), risk management (Theme 2), mitigation incentives (Theme 3) as well as overall
national and regional climate change and agricultural development policies and strategies
(Theme 4). The novel adaptation, risk-management and mitigations strategies that result from
more informed decision-making will lead to improved opportunities and capacity for the poor in
the face of climate change, so that income, nutrition and food security are increased.
3.1 Gender dimensions of impact pathways
The gender dimension of CCAFS impact pathways is summarized in Figure 1. Reading from left
to right in Figure 1: the key research outputs from integration of gender analysis into R&D,
including research on the underlying causes of gender disparities, will lead to better
understanding of what causes unequal vulnerabilities and constraints in agricultural systems
undergoing climate change. This knowledge will lead to research outcomes such as improved
understanding in diverse agencies and stakeholders of how to overcome gender differences that
are critical for successful adaptation, risk management and mitigation. Integration of gender
analysis and the use of gender research findings into the main body of CCAFS programming will
also depend on linking knowledge effectively to action. Scientists, development partners, policy
makers and other actors contributing to the Program’s outcomes and impacts will be better
equipped to use knowledge of gender differences to design and target interventions that really do
reduce vulnerabilities and unequal capacities for adaptation and mitigation.
The principal research outcome of improved knowledge and capacity will be changes in
decision-making for the design and implementation of adaptation, risk management and
mitigation strategies. CCAFS will engage actively with stakeholders in putting this knowledge
into use in the form of innovations that contribute to more equal opportunities for women dealing
with climate-change. Use of these strategies is expected to lead to development outcomes:
improved gender equity in the distribution of costs and benefits from climate change; leading to
the ultimate impacts: reduced poverty, increased income and better food security for women as
well as for men.
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RESEARCH OUTPUTS OUTCOMES
Improved knowledge of gender-
differentiated vulnerabilities and
constraints to adaptation, risk management and mitigation and
enabling institutional
arrangements and policies.
Improved data, tools, and
empirical evidence supporting
gender mainstreaming in climate change work; pro-poor
participatory action research
addressing CCAFS 'strategic research questions designed and
implemented across CCAFS sites;
capacity built in CCAFS regions to apply gender analysis to
CCAFS/partners research.
Enhanced capacity and
opportunity for adaptation to
progressive climate change, new adaptation funds and
improved adaptation
strategies and policies
benefiting farm women as
well as men.
Improved gender-equitable
climate information products and
services and risk management
innovations developed.
Enhanced capacity and opportunity for risk
management in the face of
near-term climate change impacts on agriculture, for
women as well as men.
Figure 1. Generic impact pathway (based on the impact pathway in Figure 3 in CCAFS (2011)).
Gender equity is
improved in the distribution of direct
benefits to end-users as a
result of partners’ use of
CCAFS outputs for
adaptation, risk
management and
mitigation.
Enhanced capacity and
opportunity for women
and men to benefit from carbon financing and
carbon markets and other
mitigation instruments
Adaptation of farming
systems and the required
enabling policy and institutional frameworks in
the face of future climate
uncertainties contribute to
reductions in gender
disparities in critical
vulnerabilities, female drudgery and improves
incomes for resource-poor
men and women
Improved climate information products and services and risk
management innovations produce
benefits for resource-poor women producers and traders as well as
men.
Agricultural mitigation practices,
institutional arrangements and
policies deliver benefits to poor
women as well as to men.
More gender-relevant
frameworks for policy analysis, databases, methods and ex ante
impact assessment incorporated
into planning responses to climate
change in agriculture.
Food security increased with
reduction in the
number of under-nourished men
and women.
More gender-
equitable benefits from
participation in
emerging markets for
environmental
services from
agriculture.
Poverty
reduced and
sustainable incomes
increased for
millions of
women and men.
CCAFS IMPACTS
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3.2 Partnerships for achieving outputs, outcomes and impacts
The CCAFS’ partnership strategy works at global, regional and local scales. Global partnerships
are focused on four major processes linked to outcomes and impacts: (a) Science assessments;
(b) Adaptation funds; (c) Mitigation mechanisms; and (d) Global food security. Collective
communication with partners of CCAFS research products is a central aspect of the strategy for
engaging with key actors in the science, development and policy domains. Partnering with civil
society women’s organizations with global reach will be key to integrating gender in outcomes
and impacts at global and regional levels (these organizations include the Gender and Climate
Change network (Gender CC), the Women for Climate Change Justice Network and the
Women’s Environment and Development Organization). CCAFS plans to develop a strategic
partnership with at least one of these organizations. Currently CCAFS has a strategic partnership
with FAO which has a goal of embedding gender issues into national agricultural and climate
change policies; and with the University of Oxford, UK, for community-based adaptation
planning including gender analysis.
These partners will leverage the use of CCAFS gender-relevant research outputs at global and
regional scales alongside other CCAFS partners such as science and meteorology organizations,
sponsors and managers of adaptation and mitigation funds, global development and food security
agencies, farmers’ organizations and platforms, industry platforms and standards agencies,
carbon market players and regulators, development and environment NGOs and multi-
stakeholder policy networks and initiatives.
For the mainstreaming of gender analysis into research, CCAFS will also partner with other
CRPs to make sure gender issues are addressed throughout the research cycle. The CCAFS
partnership with FAO will address mainstreaming gender into CCAFS action research with
regional and local partners. Formal training in gender analysis will be conducted with partners to
facilitate and improve the use of gender analysis and gender-sensitive participatory methods so
that women participate to the same extent as men. This partnership will work on the development
of:
(a) Tools for gender mainstreaming in climate change work;
(b) Building capacity in the CCAFS priority regions (West Africa, East Africa and
South Asia) to apply gender analysis to CCAFS’ and partners' research product
development; and
(c) Participatory action research addressing the strategic research questions identified in
this document to inform and improve research product targeting, design, testing and
evaluation.
CCAFS will also develop a strategic partnership with at least one organization or team that is a
globally-recognised source of expertise (within CG Centers, a University or think-tank) in other
research approaches to addressing its strategic gender research questions. This will complement
the FAO partnership’s focus on place-based, participatory action research by catalyzing gender
research in partners with a strong disciplinary foundation for addressing some key knowledge
gaps that represent important risks or obstacles for achieving CCAFS outcomes and impacts.
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A Competitive Small Grants Program will be conducted by CCAFS to catalyze and support
collaborative research on topics relevant to the research questions identified in the gender
strategy. Initially the Grants program will prioritize working with female PhD scientists and
students enrolled in a PhD program based in CCAFS priority geographic areas currently in East
Africa, West Africa, and South Asia, and researchers who are citizens of Ethiopia, Kenya,
Tanzania, Uganda, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Bangladesh, India, or Nepal.
4.0 Activities
This section explains the activities to integrate consideration of gender issues through the
research cycle and the methods to be used. How requirements for gender expertise will be met is
discussed and related capacity building activities are outlined. A general principle is the use of
strategies and approaches that enhance women’s active participation in CCAFS-related research,
capacity building opportunities, policy engagement activities and events at local, national,
regional and international levels.
4.1 Approach and methods
4.1.1 Gender analysis Empirical gender analysis integrated into CCAFS Theme-based research will use a range of
methods and tools. CCAFS will collect these tools and make them available though its web-
based knowledge platform. When necessary, CCAFS will ensure appropriate training in their use
is conducted for women and men researchers and field staff so that reliable data is obtained from
women informants as well as from men.
Panel studies of climate-change adaptation and mitigation processes using baseline and
follow up studies will collect gender-disaggregated data at individual (intra-household),
household and community scales. Baseline studies characterize current conditions and
contribute to problem diagnosis, ex-ante impact analysis and targeting; follow-up studies
will contribute to monitoring, evaluation and ex-post impact assessment. Baselines are
being established in selected benchmark sites using a combination of survey methods and
qualitative participatory research methods. Wherever possible, these are designed to
complement similar panel studies already in existence in other sites.
Ex-ante analysis and ex-post impact assessment incorporating gender analysis will use a
range of modelling and scenario-building tools.
Comparative case studies integrating gender analysis will be conducted across benchmark
sites.
Field testing of proposed innovations of all types uses participatory, gender-sensitive
methods to conduct evaluations with representative, gender-disaggregated social groups
of prospective end-users.
16
Tools being developed for the use of climate analogues to study farmers’ reactions to
progressive climate change and proposed adaptive strategies will incorporate gender
analysis.
4.1.2 Gender research
Gender research addresses specific questions where CCAFS has identified a need to deepen
understanding of how gender disparities affect vulnerabilities and capacities for adaptation or
mitigation. These questions are addressed primarily through participatory action research (PAR)
conducted in benchmark sites in tandem with the survey research described above. The focus of
PAR activities, which cross-cut Themes 1-3, is on climate-change risk, adaptation and mitigation
strategies that impact agriculture and food security of communities, households and individual
male and female household members who are facing climate change [CCAFS & FAO, 2011].
One objective is context analysis, designed to characterize the social, economic, environmental
and institutional constraints and resources available to communities, households and individual
men and women for dealing with climate change as well as their capacities, ongoing strategies,
risk perceptions and willingness to act. A second objective is livelihood analysis, to differentiate
how well-being, food security and income generation of men and women with different levels of
resource endowments and assets are affected by climate change. A third objective is to develop
and pilot, with development partners, a gender-responsive and socially sensitive approach to
engage intended beneficiaries as stakeholders in implementing adaptation and mitigation
interventions expected to utilize CCAFS research outputs. This includes understanding how
service providers are delivering services that involve use of CCAFS outputs, such as climate
information, extension advice on adaptation or payments for carbon designed to benefit poor
men and women farmers.
The use of a participatory approach is based in the goal of building local ownership of positive
outcomes and a foundation for self-reliance among men and women participants in adapting to
climate-change impacts on agriculture. Different kinds of stakeholders will be engaged in the
conduct of the work to enable gender representation. Participatory approaches are used to ensure
that poor men and women have a voice in the action research. The approach differentiates
between practical gender needs that are a response to an immediate, perceived necessity in
women’s daily lives and strategic gender needs related to women’s subordinate role in society ―
notably those related to access, ownership or control of natural, financial, social and political
assets — crucial for dealing successfully with climate change.
4.2 Gender in the research cycle
4.2.1 Targeting and priority setting stage of the research cycle
Targeting will use foresight studies involving scenario development at different scales,
vulnerability assessments and ex ante impact assessment analysis to diagnose vulnerabilities and
earmark areas of intervention where specific adaptation and mitigation options may be feasible,
17
taking into account gender disparities. Improving the availability and quality of gender-
disaggregated data at different scales for these studies is a priority: thus, existing and new
baseline studies are being co-ordinated in a global network of benchmark sites.
4.2.2 Research product discovery and development stages
Gender analysis is integrated into research product discovery and development in each of the
four themes via: (a) field testing and assessment of options with respect to their potential to
benefit or adversely affect different social groups, including women; (b) prioritization that
considers potential gender-differentiated impact as a criterion for selection; (c) when applicable,
testing and evaluation of options with representative socially and gender-differentiated groups of
users using participatory, gender-sensitive methods; and (d) publication of tools, strategies,
models, case studies and guidelines that include reference to gender implications. More detailed
information on integration of gender analysis is available in the logframe milestones.
4.2.3 Monitoring, evaluation stage of the research cycle Consideration of gender differences in program outcomes and impacts is built into this stage of
the research cycle, principally via reporting progress against the CCAFS log-frame and its
milestones and through the Program’s procedures for learning based in action. For example, for
2012, the CCAFS logframe has 43 milestones, of which 23 refer to activities concerned with
gender. The process of M&E in relation to gender is discussed in detail in Section 5.
4.3 Theme-based research activities integrating gender
4.3.1 Theme 1 ― Adaptation to progressive climate change
Outcome 1.1 Agricultural and food strategies that are adapted towards predicted conditions of
climate change.
Novel applications of participatory, gender-sensitive methods will be tested for grounding
climate-change model results to community-level decision-making processes that address food
security issues. Video testimonials will be produced on gender-specific farmer adaptation and
mitigation strategies (including indigenous knowledge, coping mechanisms and perceptions of
future challenges) in three sites in each of the three CCAFS initial target regions. The innovative
Analogue Methodology is being developed using participatory tools and approaches to elicit and
interpret gender-differentiated responses of farmers to climate stress conditions that represent a
likely future for their current farming system. A web-based “Adaptation and Mitigation
Knowledge Network” platform is being established to share and exchange knowledge with the
objective of linking gender-differentiated farmer’s realities and experiences on the ground with
use of CCAFS research outputs.
Outcome 1.2 Crop breeding strategies for addressing abiotic and biotic stresses induced by
future climate change.
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This work focuses on specific issues related to breeding for climate-proofing crops and
complements work conducted by comprehensive crop-breeding CRPs which will deal with
gender issues for a given crop on a broad front. Here, gender differences will be considered in
the development of breeding strategies only in terms of whether crops can be characterized as
“women’s” or “men’s “crops. Policy briefs will guide investment in climate-proofed breeding
investments that show promise for pro-poor and gender-responsive impact
Outcome 1.3 Improved adaptation policies from local to international level supporting farming
communities, rural institutions and food system actors adapted to future climate conditions in at
least 20 countries.
Research will identify gender differences in the way current institutional arrangements, policies
and other mechanisms improve adaptive capacity and how gender influences the roles played by
different social groups in supportive interventions. Gender-differentiated outcomes, including the
distribution of costs and benefits of a variety of novel adaptation options will be assessed. Policy
options will be evaluated for potential positive or adverse effects on different stakeholders
differentiated by gender. Findings will be shared with key policy makers in the form of
recommendations on how to target adaptation strategies to enable equitable access to alternative
strategies.
4.3.2 Theme 2 — Adaptation through managing climate risk
Outcome 2.1 Systematic technical and policy support by development agencies for farm-to-
community level agricultural risk management strategies and actions.
Research at the community, household and individual level uses gender analysis to identify and
evaluate the differential impact of practices, technologies and production systems selected for
demonstration on different social groups, particularly women and men, and communicate gender
implications of alternate strategies through technical and policy support activities. Guidelines
will be developed for ensuring equitable participation of women and other socially
disadvantaged groups in participatory action research on climate-related risk management. A
summary report will be prepared and disseminated on gender-differentiation of risk management
strategies and differential access to climate-related information and services at benchmark
locations in two countries in each of the CCAFS initial target regions. An assessment framework
will be developed to understand gender differences in climate-risk perception, aversion and their
influence on risk management.
Outcome 2.2 Better climate informed management by key international, regional and national
agencies.
Research will evaluate the differential impact of production, prices, incomes, consumption, trade
and humanitarian assistance for climate risk management on different social groups, particularly
men and women. A review paper will be produced with policy advice on how to enable equitable
access for gender-differentiated groups with different resource levels.
19
Outcome 2.3 Enhanced uptake and use of improved climate information products and services
and of information about agricultural production and biological threats, by resource-poor farmers
particularly vulnerable groups and women
Research will use gender analysis to identify and evaluate the differential impact of climate
information services on women and men. A report and policy advice will be prepared on the
gender and social equity of climate information sources and services and delivery mechanisms.
At two benchmark locations, a demonstration will be conducted of prototype gender-and socially
equitable information service delivery. A curriculum will be designed and disseminated for
service intermediaries on how to overcome gender and other social inequities in communicating
climate information.
4.3.3 Theme 3 — Pro-poor climate mitigation
Outcome 3.1 Enhanced knowledge about agricultural development pathways that lead to better
decisions for climate mitigation, poverty alleviation, food security and environmental health used
by national agencies in at least 20 countries
Research will use ensembles of models for ex ante analysis to elucidate the gender and social
implications of alternative development pathways and the trade-offs these involve. To inform
decision-makers of the findings, a global expert workshop will be conducted on the impacts of
alternative mitigation scenarios on men and women and marginalized farmers, and a synthesis
report will be produced and communicated for use in global forums, capacity building events and
websites.
Outcome 3.2 Improved knowledge about institutional incentives and arrangements for
mitigation practices by resource-poor farmers, project developers and policy makers in at least
20 countries.
Gender analysis will be used to improve the design and increase uptake of novel incentive
mechanisms and institutional arrangements intended to deliver benefits to poor farmers and
women. Publications, stories and films will be produced showcasing barriers to entry to the
carbon market for women and other social groups, and the range of better alternatives to better
inform decision makers in target regions about gender-responsive and pro-poor options and
policy choices. CCAFS will conduct training for decision-makers on designing payments for
carbon to benefit women farmers.
Outcome 3.3 Key agencies in at least ten countries that deal with climate mitigation promote
technically and economically feasible agricultural mitigation practices that have co-benefits for
poor farmers, particularly vulnerable groups and women.
Research involves the use of ex ante and ex post analysis of gender-disaggregated impacts of
climate-change adapted farm and landscape level practices. Methods for quantification of
agricultural greenhouse gases that address different needs of men and women farmers will be
sought.
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4.3.4 Theme 4 — Integration for decision-making
Outcome 4.1 Appropriate outcome and mitigation strategies mainstreamed into national policies
in at least 20 countries, in the development of plans of at least five economic areas covering each
of the target regions and in the global processes related to food security and climate change.
Overall, Theme 4 provides a diagnostic and analytical framework for the whole of CCAFS to
assess likely impacts of climate change on agriculture and likely impacts of policies and program
interventions on adaptation and mitigation. Evidence of the benefits of gender-responsive and
pro-poor adaptation and mitigation policies and strategies will be fed into ongoing Theme 4.1-led
regional and national scenarios and other ‘linking to policy’ engagement and communication
efforts. Regional partner dialogues are planned on gender and climate change issues to raise
awareness and share evidence across CCAFS regions. A global conference will be organized on
gender and climate change that brings together work from Themes 1, 2 and 3. This will be
organised in collaboration with some of the strategic partners for gender and climate change,
including CAPRi (the CG-wide collective action and property rights program) and CGIAR
Research Program on Policies, Institutions and Markets.
Socially and gender-differentiated decision aids and information products will be targeted to
different types of stakeholders. For the development of these products, gender analysis will be
used, together with visualization techniques in pilot studies to capture the perceptions of different
stakeholders on climate change impacts and in other studies of effective engagement strategies
for utilizing climate information for decision-making. Different mitigation and adaptation
options and national policies will be assessed using gender analysis to promote equitable access
to the technical and institutional assistance required.
Outcome 4.2 Improved frameworks, databases and methods for planning responses to climate
change used by national agencies in at least 20 countries and by at least 10 key international and
regional agencies.
Activities include identification of knowledge and information gaps for gender-disaggregated
analyses and sources of gender-disaggregated data that can be used for ex ante and ex post
impact assessment. Regional site characterization will generate gender-disaggregated baseline
data at individual, household and village scales.
Outcome 4.3 New knowledge on how alternate policy and program options impact agriculture
and food security under climate change incorporated into strategy development by national
agencies in at least 20 countries and by at least 10 key international and regional agencies.
The objective is to refine frameworks and modeling tools for policy analysis and to ensure that
these factor in gender differences and facilitate identification of different outcomes for men and
women.
21
4.4 Capacity for conducting gender analysis and gender research
4.4.1 Management, staffing and resources for the gender strategy
CCAFS approach is to address gender disparities as one aspect of the broad issues of social
inequality and poverty reduction. Thus while the Theme 4 leader has overall responsibility for
the gender strategy, implementation is broadly distributed among Theme and Regional leaders.
Theme 4 coordinates the strategic partnership with FAO, methodology and capacity development
for gender analysis and research on specific questions related to gender (principally participatory
action research). Theme and Regional leaders have major responsibility for ensuring that gender
and social analysis are integrated into Theme and Center-activity plans and for ensuring plans are
implemented. Each Theme leader ensures availability of the expertise in gender and social
analysis required, whether through other CRPs, partnerships, consultancies or recruitment. For
example, Theme 1 obtains gender expertise for African and South Asian target regions through
partnerships with the University of Oxford and the University of Greenwich, UK, which supply
part-time or full-time faculty, and is also appointing a post-doctoral fellow who will conduct
comparative research across sites in three target regions, with mentoring from the University of
Florida, Gainesville, USA. Regional leaders coordinate initiatives related to gender with
development partners: for example, in South Asia, a leadership training for women community
leaders is preparing them to make use of climate-change information.
While mechanisms for obtaining gender expertise will vary substantially from Theme to Theme,
the Program expects to utilise gender expertise, that on average amounts to the equivalent of one
senior scientist and a post-doctoral fellow (plus their operational costs) per each of three target
regions, on an annual basis. In addition, the Program Director, Theme and Regional leaders all
devote a percentage of their time to planning, coordination, as well as monitoring and evaluation
to ensure integration of gender analysis through the research cycle. The Program is currently
developing a strategic partnership with a ‘gender technical advisory group’ in collaboration with
a range of CGIAR Centers and other CRPs to strengthen the capacity of the Theme 4 leader to
provide overall guidance and coordination for gender analysis and research across target regions
and Themes.
4.4.2 Capacity building for integration of gender across the research program
Capacity building activities will be undertaken to foster integration of gender analysis across the
Program and to support the use of gender analysis as follows:
Develop, collect, and disseminate appropriate methods for addressing gender issues
related to CCAFS research priorities;
Maintain a page on the CCAFS website and facilitate a community of practice for
knowledge-sharing and collaboration in climate-change related gender research;
Employ strategies and approaches that enhance women’s active participation in CCAFS-
related research, capacity building opportunities, policy engagement activities and events
at local, national, regional and international levels;
Train partners in gender-sensitive research approaches across CCAFS Themes, including
training of trainers by partners and sponsoring their participation in CCAFS-related
22
global and regional events; assess and monitor needs for training in these approaches and
maintain a roster of suppliers of appropriate training in CCAFS target regions;
Develop jointly with gender specialists, training courses and materials focused on gender
and climate change issues in agriculture and food security research and rural
development. One use of these materials will be to inform local leaders (with some
initiatives targeting women leaders in particular) about CCAFS-related issues and
knowledge; and
Contribute to the recruitment and leadership development of women scientists working
on CCAFS Theme research questions and sponsor their participation in important
CCAFS-related events.
5.0 Monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment
5.1 Monitoring and evaluation of progress towards gender-responsive outcomes
Monitoring and evaluation of progress towards outcomes and of the integration of gender
analysis into the work are incorporated in the milestones and performance indicators of the
CCAFS logframe.
The logframe and milestones are subjected to full participatory review on an annual basis.
Annual workplans developed with partners will be reviewed by Theme leaders with input from
gender experts for the appropriate integration of gender analysis.
Reviews and stakeholder consultations designed to keep the program responsive to arising issues
and needs in the spheres of climate change, agriculture and food security at global, regional and
national levels will integrate gender issues. An internally commissioned review of progress on
mainstreaming gender analysis into the research program is proposed for Year 3 (2013).
5.2 Feedback and learning from gender analysis
Given the Program’s goal to integrate gender fully into its research and development, progress
on mainstreaming gender analysis into research will be part of the agenda of the CCAFS
Independent Scientific Panel which meets twice yearly. The Program Management Committee
will monitor progress on the objectives of the Gender Strategy via annual assessment of
performance indicators similar to those outlined in Box 2 below. A recommendation for the
formation of a CCAFS gender research working group is under consideration by CCAFS
management. The primary function of this group, which would include the Theme leaders, would
be to: (a) review across Themes, the results of assessment of performance indicators; (b)
facilitate any adjustments needed in annual workplans or reports; (c) assist CCAFS management,
scientists and partners to hold each other accountable for timely sharing of gender-disaggregated
information and analyses at different stages in the research cycle; and (d) ensure research
23
planning and implementation benefits from appropriate collaboration with gender expertise in
other CRPs and partners working on CCAFS-related outputs.
Box 2. Proposed performance indicators for M&E
A. Integration of gender in research outputs
Achievement of gender-related milestones in the logframe
Individual and institutional annual workplans include and deliver on relevant gender-related
research activities
Investment of human and financial resources is appropriate for deploying the required quality and
quantity of expertise in gender analysis (whether in-house or outsourced)
B. Integration of gender in the research cycle
Targeting, vulnerability assessments and baseline studies address gender-differentiation at
appropriate scales
Priority-setting for planning the research explicitly includes gender-related criteria and ex ante
analysis (qualitative or quantitative) addresses gender-differentiated outcomes
Gender analysis used in the prioritization and design of adaptive and mitigation strategies, farming
systems, technologies and institutions and the designation of “flagship” technologies
Testing, validation and scaling out of research products with partners includes gender analysis,
evaluations use relevant gender-differentiated criteria and where appropriate, inclusion of women
as at least 40 percent of active participants
Ex post impact assessment includes examination of changes in the distribution of benefits among
women and men
Gender participation targets in CCAFS partnerships, research, training, grant-making activities
and recruitment are established and met
The CCAFS program has a number of mechanisms for regular monitoring, review and change
under the rubric of “smart learning loops” whereby researchers keep returning to stakeholders to
jointly develop means of adapting, learning and responding to feedback. Built into the
engagement and communications strategy are several types of low-cost continual monitoring
(e.g. of the needs and experiences of website visitors) to provide rapid feedback on the utility of
science and policy outputs. These practices will be applied to assess the relevance and utility of
the gender content of research outputs in published reports, guidelines, policy frameworks,
strategies, models and methodologies.
An important feature of CCAFS is that it will provide space for evidence-based dialogue on
climate change in agriculture across interest groups. Recognizing that many of the most effective
managers of agricultural systems under climate change, particularly women, may be excluded
from formal public-sector policy and program processes, CCAFS’ policy is to involve these
different users of knowledge right from the problem definition stage. Partnerships with civil
society women’s organizations will foster a co-learning approach to monitoring the integration of
gender evidence into dialogue between CCAFS and decision-makers.
24
5.3 Impact assessment
A central feature of the CCAFS Program’s strategy is ex ante analysis of the likely impacts of
climate change for agriculture under different future scenarios and in relation to “flagship”
policy, institutional and technology options identified by CCAFS research. Theme 4 coordinates
the synthesis and communication of this work with decision-makers.
CCAFS is compiling a globally common set of baseline indicators on agricultural productivity,
rural livelihoods and biogeophysical attributes at selected study sites which include socially and
gender-disaggregated indicators such as statistics related to women’s roles in agriculture and
related organizations and networks. These indicators are intended to complement more
comprehensive monitoring and ex post impact assessment studies of gender-differentiated
impacts to be conducted mainly by CCAFS’ implementing partners with CCAFS scientific
support, including partnering CGIAR Centers and in collaboration with other CRPs. CCAFS will
work with partners to ensure that their baseline and impact studies germane to collaborative work
on climate change address the gender impact pathways for CCAFS research outputs synthesized
in Figure 1. CCAFS will also explore possibilities for establishing ‘gender sentinel sites’ in
colloaboration with other CRPs where more intensive intra-household and other gender-focused
research (e.g. how various ‘climate-smart’ interventions impact women) will be jointly designed
and implemented as this is difficult and relatively expensive research to undertake.
For impact assessment, the minimum set of gender-responsive indicators will include the
following or similar ones:
The level of gender disparities in access to, ownership of or usufruct rights to assets
(land, water, forest, fishery, livestock, germplasm) that are critical for the implementation
of adaptive strategies or mitigation options;
Gender roles and responsibilities in farm and rural, non-farm activities impacted by
adaptive strategies or mitigation practices resulting from CCAFS research;
Changes in control by men and women over food, forage, fuel or income benefits
obtained from a given crop, livestock, agro-forestry or aquaculture system when
adaptation or mitigation is implemented;
Gender disparities in access to, effective use of and benefits from climate-related
information, weather insurance or other risk management options resulting from CCAFS
research;
Change in benefit streams captured by men and women via engagement in markets for
environmental services that incorporate CCAFS recommendations;
Changes in institutional rules, procedures or policies for mitigation or adaptation in
agriculture making them more or less favourable to redressing gender inequities;
Increased inclusion of gender-disaggregated evidence in climate change policy dialogue
informed by CCAFS, at regional and global scales; and
Gender–disaggregated, multidimensional poverty, livelihood and nutrition indicators.
25
6.0 Budget for gender activities
Table 6.1 presents the proposed investment for the period 2012-2015 in gender expertise and
capacity development that will be fully dedicated to implementing gender analysis and/or
gender-related research activities. The total amounts to USD 3.24 million in 2012 rising to USD
6.96 million by 2015. This is a portion of a larger amount of Program resources invested in other
types of social analysis that may also include gender as a variable.
Personnel costs refer approximately to the equivalent of one senior scientist and one postdoctoral
fellow for each of the three target regions in 2012, and gradually increasing each year as
additional gender capacity within partner organizations and the CCAFS team itself can also be
included. Collaboration costs refer to investments in non-CGIAR organizations that provide
inputs other than personnel with gender expertise. A substantial portion of the gender expertise
involved is expected to come from partners, including CRPs and Centers.
It is still too early to determine the exact percentage of each Center’s budget that is going
towards gender-targeted activities, so we are assuming it is 7% and will be working with each
center (and developing cross-center and cross-site gender activities), so anticipate this increasing
over time. Based upon this initial assumption, Table 6.2 shows distribution of the 2012 total for
gender activities of USD 3.24 million among main partners contributing to CCAFS, illustrating
that among the Centers; ICRAF, CIAT, and Bioversity will be key players in implementing
gender activities relating to climate change (and a review of 2011 gender-related activities
confirms this). It should be noted that Centers such as IFPRI, ILRI, CIFOR and IWMI have been
leading the way in terms of innovate gender-agricultural R4D research, but this is reported under
other CRPs, so cross-center collaboration on cutting edge methods and implementing research
jointly with other CRPs in ‘gender sentinel sites’ (i.e. where several CRP’s are undertaking
gender-focused research jointly) is a critical strategy that CCAFS is pursuing. These
expenditures will be reported across CRPs and not just here. There will also be other partners
Table 6.1 Gender staffing budget
(US Million)2012 2013 2014 2015 TOTAL
Personnel Costs 0.69 0.95 1.49 1.53 4.66
Travel 0.11 0.14 0.23 0.23 0.71
Operating Expenses 0.29 0.39 0.61 0.63 1.93
Training & Workshop 0.15 0.21 0.32 0.33 1.01
Collaborators/Partnership Costs 1.35 1.86 2.91 3.00 9.12
Capital and other equipment 0.11 0.05 0.09 0.03 0.27
Contingency 0.13 0.18 0.28 0.29 0.89
Subtotal 2.82 3.79 5.94 6.05 18.59
Institutional Overhead 0.42 0.57 0.89 0.91 2.79
TOTAL GENDER BUDGET 3.24 4.35 6.83 6.96 21.38
W1 & W2 budget* 40.6 42.6 44.8 47.0 175.0
% over total budget 8% 10% 15% 15% 12%
* The W1&W2 budget assumptions have been changed from what is in the Program Plan, by assuming only a 5% increase each year
26
outside of the CG that are key, particularly FAO, WOCAN and other women’s networks and
University partners with releveant gender expertise and experience in CCAFS regions.
* Notes: Total includes partner-led activities as well as CCAFS-led activities.
Table 6.2 2012 budget distribution
(US Million)TOTAL
ICRAF 0.69
CIAT 0.57
Bioversity 0.51
ILRI 0.27
CIMMYT 0.25
ICRISAT 0.22
IWMI 0.20
CIP 0.10
ICARDA 0.09
IITA 0.05
Others 0.16
Subtotal 3.10
Coordination 0.14
Total 3.24
27
7.0 Synthesis
CCAFS approaches gender primarily as a cross-cutting theme within the context of its broader
objective of achieving positive impact on social inclusion for the rural poor. Gender analysis is
therefore applied broadly to deepen the relevance of other research themes, while research on
gender is undertaken selectively to address a few questions that represent important risks or
opportunities for the Program. CCAFS employs strategies and approaches that enhance women’s
active participation in CCAFS-related research, capacity building opportunities, policy
engagement activities and events at local, national, regional and international levels.
Gender is integrated throughout the research cycle. Gender objectives are expressed in the
CCAFS log-frame and in milestones used to monitor progress of its activities. Milestones are
regularly assessed and updated as a part of regular planning and review by Program
Management. Consideration of gender is included in diagnostic and baseline studies being
conducted in a network of benchmark sites. Ways to include gender in ex ante analysis using
qualitative as well as quantitative methodologies are being sought with partners. Gender is
included in pilot testing of CCAFS-related innovations using participatory methodologies and
the active participation of women. Monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment with partners
will use gender-responsive indicators.
Responsibility for gender is distributed throughout the Program. The Theme 4 leader is
responsible for overall coordination of the Program’s diagnostic and analytic framework
including the cross-program integration of gender analysis, gender research and capacity
building. The leader of each of Themes 1, 2 and 3 is responsible for planning, implementation
and monitoring integration of gender analysis within a given Theme and its related Center-
activities. Regional leaders ensure coordination of gender-related work within each of CCAFS
target regions (currently, East and West Africa and South Asia with a fourth region soon to be
added). Expertise in gender analysis and research is obtained by CCAFS through a strategic
partnership with FAO for capacity development and participatory action research in benchmark
sites (Theme 4), a Competitive Fellowship program (Theme 4) and partnership with the
Universities of Oxford and Greenwich, UK (Theme 1). CCAFS will expand its partnerships
with: (a) international civil society women’s organizations to facilitate policy dialogue on gender
issues related to climate change adaptation and mitigation; (b) a team of gender experts from CG
centers and University department(s) that can strengthen gender research and use of its results;
and (c) other CRPs and Centers with established capacity for tackling gender in agriculture.
Specifically for gender analysis and gender research, CCAFS plans to invest USD 3.24 million in
2012, rising to USD 9.66 million by 2015. This is a portion of a much larger amount of Program
resources invested in other types of social analysis that may also include gender as a variable.
28
8.0 References
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